Preconditions for Live-Action Moving Pictures (“Movies”)
Preconditions for Live-Action Movies
1. Understanding the Persistence of Vision phenomenon
Preconditions for Live-Action Movies
1. Understanding the Persistence of Vision phenomenon
2. Photography (rather than hand-drawn images)
Preconditions for Live-Action Movies
1. Understanding the Persistence of Vision phenomenon
2. Photography (rather than hand-drawn images)
3. A short exposure time
Preconditions for Live-Action Movies
1. Understanding the Persistence of Vision phenomenon
2. Photography (rather than hand-drawn images)
3. A short exposure time
4. Ability to move film intermittently
Preconditions for Live-Action Movies
1. Understanding the Persistence of Vision phenomenon
2. Photography (rather than hand-drawn images)
3. A short exposure time
4. Ability to move film intermittently
5. A suitable film base
Roget
Plateau
Faraday
Wheatstone
1.
2.
Niepce
Daguerre
2.
1826 photograph by Niepce:
“View from the Window at Le Gras”
Niepce
Daguerreotype of Edgar Allen Poe, 1848
2.
Daguerre
2.
2.
3.
Brady did not invent it, but it bears his name. . .
Confederate dead, Fredericksburg
Action at Fredericksburg
3.
In 1871, the gelatin bromide process (invented by British doctor Richard Leach Maddox) brought exposure times down to a fraction of a second—”by mixing a solution of gelatin with cadmium bromide and silver nitrate, an emulsion of silver bromide was formed, suspended in the gelatin” (Rawlence, 1990) which was coated on glass or paper.
4.
5.
* - George Eastman (U.S.) in 1885 developed a paper-roll film—gelatin layer soaked in water and stripped off paper after exposure, allowing for mounting on glass or thick gelatin for printing.
5.
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